I don’t know about the legal restrictions that apply to the use of cluster munitions. The facts of the matter are that Israel dropped a lot of them on Lebanon, and because of the relatively high failure rate of munitions, there are a lot of bomblets that are unexploded and doing massive amounts of collateral damage to innocent people more than a year after the invasion. Bomblets have similar effects to people as land mines do, but there are rules (namely Protocol II of the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons) that govern the use of land mines that supposedly make it easier for the mines to be cleaned up after the war is over. The problem with cluster bombs is that, unlike land mines, the bomb may go off-course in its descent and even if it doesn’t, the bomblets themselves fall indiscriminately over the area where the bomb was dropped. This makes cleaning them up following the cessation of hostilities even more difficult than clearing mines – at least there’s supposed to be a map for the location of the mines.

It doesn’t help that some U.S.-made cluster bombs look a lot like air-dropped food rations (the yellow is supposed to make them both easy to see, in one case to make the food easy to find and in the other case to make the bomblet easy to avoid – too bad it doesn’t always work that way). In areas where bomblets and food rations are both air-dropped, the combination of the two with a population that probably can’t read English has earned the U.S. (and our allies who use our cluster bombs, like Israel) a great deal of well deserved criticism.

There are calls to ban cluster bombs from NGOs like Stop Cluster Munitions and a number of governments as well. The problem is that, as weapons of war, they are singularly effective at destroying your enemy. Bombs or artillery shells hit a single spot and radiate out destruction from that location. Cluster submunitions delivered by bombs or artillery shells spread out over a larger area, creating a much larger zone of destruction and death. Submunitions can be designed to punch through armor, start fires, operate like grenades in an anti-personnel fashion, lay an instant mine field (something that is frowned on by the U.N.), even render airfield runways useless. And for that reason, there will always be people willing to use cluster munitions of various sorts.

You’d think that, with all the badness that goes along with cluster bombs, I’d be all for banning them, along with land mines. I’m not, though. As horrible as they are, when used “responsibly,” their very effectiveness makes them irreplaceable in war. But I do believe that it’s a moral requirement for any invader to pay for the removal of any unexploded land mines or submunitions, just as it’s morally necessary to compensate those non-combatants injured by unexploded submunitions. Just as the U.N. demands that all mine fields be mapped and the location of every mine identified, the number of cluster munitions and every impact point must also be mapped accurately so that every last cluster munition can be removed safely. It also wouldn’t hurt to make damn sure that your food rations aren’t colored the same color as your bomblets.

Bombing population centers like Israel did in Lebanon will always earn the aggressor international disdain, even if the innocent population has all fled and only combatants remain. After all, the homes and livelihoods of the general population are being destroyed as the combatants fight. But this has always been true in war, and probably always will be. Ultimately, if you choose to engage in warfare, the most humane (if anything about war could be called such) way to wage war is to do so with the most effective weapons at your disposal, to win fast, and to disrupt the general population as little as possible. And if cluster bombs are the right weapon to do that, so be it.

“Compassion” and “Humanity” are both terms that are excluded by thier very nature from their practitioners of “WAR”, as the purpose of “WAR” is to wreck as much DEATH AND DESTRUCTION as possible upon one’s enemies with the hope that such carnage will subjugate them or remove them completely, which ever may come first.
To deny “warriors” the weapons of war. is to render “warriors” impotent to the point of uselessness, and “useless warriors” are a drag on the markets of the world…..so forget “OUT LAWING” cluster bombs or any other “weapons of mass destruction” as such laws are meant only to be disobeyed by people like GEORGE W. BUSH, DICK CHENEY, JOE LIEBERMAN AND THAT SORT, get what I mean, CLYDE?

1. “Then she voted down a Democratic-sponsored resolution restricting U.S. exports of cluster bombs to countries using them against civilian-populated areas.” Hillary Clinton, that is, from my recent post.

2.

“Ultimately, if you choose to engage in warfare, the most humane (if anything about war could be called such) way to wage war is to do so with the most effective weapons at your disposal, to win fast, and to disrupt the general population as little as possible. And if cluster bombs are the right weapon to do that, so be it.”

Brian, you’re way simplifying an issue that is dealt with in depth in a book I’m just finishing reading — “Among the Dead Cities: The History and Moral Legacy of the WWII Bombing of Civilians in Germany and Japan” by A.C. Grayling (Walker & Company, 2006).

That win fast now, save lives in the long run argument has long been used by advocates of bombing. I’m not equipped to discuss it further. But I strongly urge those concerned with the issue of civilian casualties — arguably the second-greatest issue on earth after global warming — to read the above book.

gimpman – I’m not sure that I’m comfortable subscribing that magnitude of sociopathic tendencies to either the designers of air-dropped MREs or the designers of cluster munitions.

Russ – there’s no doubt that I’m simplifying this issue, but I don’t think I qualify as a supporter of bombing as such, but rather a supporter of short, minimally disruptive/destructive wars. The questions is what weapons are most effective at producing such a beast.

And keep in mind that “effective” doesn’t mean “militarily effective” – if I was thinking in such narrow terms, I would have said so. To use an intentionally horrible example, even if nukes were considered the most “militarily effective” weapon to use, I find it highly unlikely that they’d be the most effective weapon overall. The fallout – radioactive, political, and economic – would probably be so bad as to overwhelm any military considerations. Assuming that the CIC was rational, anyway.

Diodotus – fundamentally that definition of “discrimination” is useless. Bullets can go astray. Artillery shells and bombs can fail to detonate and lie within the ground until an unlucky farmer or construction worker hits it. By that definition, every weapon is illegal under international law.

[…] Cluster Bombsare air-dropped or ground-launched munitions that eject a number of smaller submunitions (”bomblets”).When they are dropped on enemy territory, many of the bomblets fail to explode, and form a land mine like hazard. They are often dropped with tissue like parachutes. They have been called “Lethal Pinatas“. They are often a bright yellow. This is similar to food packages, and can confuse someone who does not speak english. They remain on the ground, waiting to explode, when civilian populations return home after the war. According to Handicap International: Ninety-eight percent of cluster submunitions casualties are civilians killed and injured while returning home in the aftermath of conflict or while going about their daily tasks to survive. terrorism- 2-Violence against civilians to achieve military or political objectives. Does dropping bomblets on a civilian area qualify as terrorism? […]